Upon the evidence in this case, in which Kansas claims title to
certain land now lying on the Missouri side of the Missouri River
in the Forbes Bend area, Kansas has failed to show that, at any
time during the period in question, the main channel of the
Missouri River shifted from a course such as the river now follows
(or one slightly closer to the Kansas bluffs) to one following the
course of the channel on the Missouri side when the flow was
divided. Therefore, the land in dispute must be awarded to
Missouri, and the boundary will be fixed in accordance with the
recommendations of the Special Master. Pp.
322 U. S. 214,
322 U. S. 232.
Bill of complaint by Kansas against Missouri to determine and
fix the boundary between the States. Leave to file the bill was
granted by this Court, 310 U.S. 614.
MR. JUSTICE RUTLEDGE delivered the opinion of the Court.
Kansas brings this original suit against Missouri to have
determined their common boundary from the mouth of the Kaw or
Kansas River northwardly, over a distance of approximately 128
miles, along the channel of the Missouri River to its intersection
with Kansas' north boundary line.
At the time of Kansas' admission to the Union, January 29, 1861,
the western boundary of Missouri followed the
Page 322 U. S. 214
thread of the Missouri River -- that is, the middle line of its
main navigable channel -- between these points. [
Footnote 1] This line then became the common
boundary of the two states. [
Footnote 2] The bill of complaint was filed in 1940. It
alleged that the thread of the stream had shifted frequently,
sometimes suddenly, sometimes gradually, and that these changes had
caused controversies concerning the true boundary. When the
proceeding began, it was in dispute at a number of places.
[
Footnote 3] But, during
pendency of the suit, the parties have settled all differences
except one. This relates to the section of the boundary in the
Forbes Bend region. [
Footnote
4]
After the filing of the suit, a master was appointed. Extensive
hearings were held. Both documentary and oral evidence was
presented. The master has filed his report, which makes findings
and conclusions in favor of Missouri. Kansas says these are
contrary to the law and to the weight of the evidence.
The land in dispute consists of about 2000 acres. This now lies
on the Missouri side of the river toward the lower end of Forbes
Bend. Kansas claims this land was at one time soil accreted to the
Kansas bank, which an avulsive change in the course of the main
channel has put back on the Missouri side, or, in the alternative,
that the tract
Page 322 U. S. 215
formed as an island on the Kansas side of the main channel and,
as a result of a sudden shift in that channel to the other side of
the island and the drying up of the old course, it has become
physically attached to Missouri. In either event, Kansas urges, it
follows that the boundary remains at the center of the river's
former main channel. Missouri denies that the land accreted to
Kansas, that there was avulsion, or that the island ever lay on the
Kansas side of the main channel.
The states are not in dispute about the applicable law. They
agree that, when changes take place by the slow and gradual process
of accretion, the boundary moves with the shifting in the main
channel's course. [
Footnote 5]
Likewise, they agree that a sudden or avulsive change in that
course does not move the boundary, but leaves it where the channel
formerly had run. [
Footnote
6]
However, the parties are sharply at odds over the facts and the
conclusions to be drawn from the evidence. In view of this, and
since we think the facts as presented by the evidence are
conclusive of the controversy, it becomes necessary to sketch them
and to refer to portions of the evidence in order to give an
understanding of the issues and the basis for our conclusions.
I
Forbes Bend lies between Doniphan County, Kansas, and Holt
County, Missouri. The disputed boundary, according to the master's
findings, extends along the main channel of the river as it now
flows for a distance of about five miles bending southeasterly from
Channel Mileage Station 515 to Station 510 (as measured and marked
in
Page 322 U. S. 216
1890). As the river enters Forbes Bend from the north, it flows
east of south. Near the point of entrance, it is joined by Wolf
Creek. This comes into the river from the Kansas side in an
easterly direction. The mouth of Wolf Creek is roughly adjacent to
Station 515. From this point, the Kansas bluffs swing in a gradual
convex curve southeasterly until they reach a point above Station
510. On the Missouri side, the bluffs run, as they do on the Kansas
side, generally southeasterly. Throughout the Forbes Bend region,
the distance as the crow flies from the Kansas bluffs to the
Missouri bluffs is four miles, more or less. Adjacent to and
parallel with the Missouri bluffs, but between them and the river,
lie tracks of the Burlington Railroad.
The Missouri River is a vagrant, turbulent stream. Its name
reflects this character. The Big Muddy is said to carry more silt
than any other river except the Yellow River in China. It is
constantly changing its course within the region between its
bluffs, shifting from side to side as natural forces work upon its
flow. Expert testimony is that a change of conditions in one bend
produces changes as great, or nearly so, in the next bend
below.
The river flows around a big bend, known as Wolf Creek Bend,
just before it reaches the mouth of Wolf Creek. Here it runs almost
due south. It is conceded by all that, in 1900, the river flowed
southeasterly in a single channel from the mouth of Wolf Creek,
hugging the Kansas bluffs throughout the entire course of flow to
Station 510. As it presently flows, the river makes a wide arc,
first to the left, or Missouri, bank in a course almost due east or
north of east, before it turns sharply to the south again at a
point midway between the bluffs, and follows this southerly course
until it strikes the old main channel at the Kansas bluffs above
Station 510. This bend now is in the form of a bow, with the river
proper forming the bow and the old channel along the Kansas bank
its string. Roughly,
Page 322 U. S. 217
therefore, the difference between the present flow through
Forbes Bend and the flow in 1900 is the difference between the bow
and the string. At the center of the bow, the distance between the
old channel and the present one appears to be, at most, one
mile.
However, as will appear, the channel's present location results
from more complex changes than merely a movement of the river north
and east over the distance lying between these two channels.
According to the greatly preponderant, though not undisputed,
evidence, there was a division of channels in Forbes Bend from
about 1914 or 1917 to 1927 or 1928. During this time, the more
westerly, or Kansas, channel lay slightly west of where the present
channel runs. The Missouri, or easterly, channel lay on the other
side of the area in dispute, which then formed part of a bar or
island. At one time, probably about 1922 or 1923, during the period
of greatest erosion of the Missouri bank, this channel came within
half a mile or less of the Burlington tracks. The Missouri channel,
with the river above it, then followed a course almost due east or
slightly north of east from below the mouth of Wolf Creek to the
point of its closest approach to the railroad. Then it swung
sharply to the south and, in a curving line, came back to join the
original channel near the Kansas bluffs above Station 510.
From the recital thus far, it is clear that, in 1900, the land
which then lay where the disputed tract now lies was Missouri land.
This is undisputed. Likewise, the tract now is attached to Missouri
on the easterly bank of the river. This is because the Missouri
channel dried up during some five to eight years beginning around
1927 or earlier. But, before that process began, for many years,
the land in question lay between the two channels. And it is from
conflicting views concerning whether, how, and when these major
changes took place the parties derive their respective claims to
sovereignty over this soil.
Page 322 U. S. 218
Kansas first claims that the land in dispute became hers by
accretion. Her principal theory is that, beginning in 1900 and
during a period extending to 1917 or to 1927, the river channel,
due to changes upstream, gradually moved out from the Kansas bluffs
over a distance of some three to three and a half miles to the
north and east. [
Footnote 7] As
Missouri soil thus was being cut away, it is said the land in
question was built up gradually on the Kansas side. In any event,
if it was not connected firmly to the Kansas shore, it was
separated only by narrow and irregular chutes and sloughs, not by
any sort of regular channel. Then, either in 1917 [
Footnote 8] or in 1927, [
Footnote 9] ice jams forming in the river caused
it suddenly to leave its channel near the Missouri bluffs and to
open a new one near where the present channel runs. Relying upon
accretion from 1900 to 1917 or 1927 for acquisition of the disputed
area, Kansas relies upon avulsion in 1917 or 1927 to prevent losing
the area again to Missouri. Her alternative theory of island
formation is relied on in case that of accretion and avulsion fails
on the proof. By this, the island formed on her side of the main
channel and the subsequent shift of the main
Page 322 U. S. 219
flow to the Kansas channel and drying up of the Missouri channel
did not affect her jurisdiction.
Missouri meets all of Kansas' claims with denial on the facts.
She says first that the land in question has been at no time
accreted soil of Kansas. On the contrary, she claims that the
disputed area formed as an island in the river bed beginning about
1910 or 1912, and from then until 1927 or 1928, there was a divided
flow around this island, a Missouri channel running north and east
of it with a Kansas channel to the south and west. She insists that
the Kansas channel always remained the main channel of the stream,
and only a minor one reached proximity to the railroad tracks.
Accordingly, she says the island formed as Missouri land, and
always remained Missouri territory. Missouri thus opposes her view
of island formation both to Kansas' view of that process and to her
claim of accretion and avulsion.
However, Missouri adds a further argument, even if the Kansas
theory of accretion is conceded. According to this, the effect of
the accretion to the Kansas bank is counteracted by the fact that
at no time was there an avulsive change, whether, in 1917 or in
1927. On the contrary, the river moved back gradually as it came.
In this view, the accretive process working against Missouri ended
in 1923 or 1924, when the Missouri channel reached greatest
proximity to the railroad tracks. Beginning in those years and
continuing gradually until 1933 or 1934, the river moved slowly
back to a point beyond the location of the present channel. Thus,
purporting to follow the accretion theory in both directions,
Missouri claims the land in question.
It may be noted that crucial to Kansas' case, whether on her
theory of accretion and avulsion or on that of island formation, is
the need for showing that the main channel followed the course of
the Missouri channel.
Page 322 U. S. 220
II
Roughly, the history of the Bend, for our purposes, may be
divided into three periods -- namely, from 1900 to 1917, from 1917
to 1928, and from 1928 to 1940, when this suit was begun. There is
documentary evidence as well as oral testimony for the period prior
to 1900. There is little or no documentary evidence in the form of
maps, photographs, drawings, or other materials from 1900 to 1923.
There is a considerable amount of documentary material from 1923
on.
Perhaps the most important documentary item is a map of the
Forbes Bend region compiled from the field in 1923 by the United
States Engineer Office at Kansas City, designated as complainant's
Exhibit 46 in this record. Another map of considerable assistance,
with information penciled on it by two witnesses who testified at
the hearings, is complainant's Exhibit 47. This purports to show in
less detail than Exhibit 46 conditions in the Bend in 1926. The
witnesses' penciled additions, placing channels and other
landmarks, with their testimony, give considerable information
about conditions in the Bend from 1921 or 1922 on to 1926 and
later. Assistance also is derived from complainant's Exhibit 56.
This is an aerial survey photograph of the Forbes Bend region made
in 1941, showing conditions when this suit was begun. Reference to
these exhibits will be made as the testimony of some of the
witnesses is referred to.
It is clearly established that, sometime around 1900, fixed by
some older witnesses variously as beginning earlier and by others
later, the river began a northerly and eastward movement, cutting
away the Missouri bank and filling in on the Kansas bank. [
Footnote 10] Neighborhood testimony
attributes the beginning of this movement to some change
Page 322 U. S. 221
in conditions upstream, taking place apparently around the mouth
of Wolf Creek or in Wolf Creek Bend above. [
Footnote 11] Whatever this change may have been,
it apparently threw the current of the stream against the solid
rock formation on what is known as Lookout Mountain. This is a
point on the Kansas bluffs about a mile or a mile and a half below
the mouth of Wolf Creek. The current, striking this rock with
force, was thrown over to the north, or Missouri, bank.
The soil composition of the north bank is a common formation in
the Missouri River valley. Underneath the surface soil is sand or
quicksand. This is covered by a layer of gumbo soil. Testimony in
the record discloses there is no great erosion when the water is
very high or very low. But when it is at an intermediate stage, the
water comes in contact with the underlying sand, washes it out, and
the topsoil falls into the river in great chunks, often twenty feet
long by ten feet wide. As the current was forced from the Kansas
rock to the Missouri sand, it undercut more and more of the
Missouri soil. Evidence in the record also shows that, between 1900
and 1920, or a little later, from 4,000 to 5,000 acres of Missouri
soil was washed into the river by this process. On this stood
houses, barns, a school building known as the Baker schoolhouse,
and other structures, which either went into the river as the soil
was undermined or were moved to prevent their falling in. The Baker
schoolhouse, which in 1900 was a mile or more northeast from the
river bank, was moved about 1915 to prevent its going into the
river. [
Footnote 12]
Page 322 U. S. 222
By that time, the erosion was moving at great speed, and this
continued until the farthest point was reached, a half mile or less
from the Burlington railroad, about 1923 to 1925. [
Footnote 13]
The clear weight of the evidence is that there was only a single
channel of the river until about 1912 or 1914. Witnesses for both
Kansas and Missouri substantiate this. [
Footnote 14] The evidence also clearly establishes
that there was a divided flow from 1917 or earlier to 1927. This
too is substantiated by both Kansas and Missouri witnesses.
[
Footnote 15] The evidence,
however, is conflicting concerning when the division first took
place and whether, while it remained, the Kansas channel or the
Missouri channel was the main one.
Witnesses for Missouri, and some for Kansas, testify that the
division occurred before 1917, and that the two channels remained
substantially equal or the Kansas channel was the larger in the
volume of water carried between the time of the division and
sometime between 1922 and 1927 or 1928. [
Footnote 16] The Missouri witnesses fairly uniformly
agree that the flow in the two channels was at
Page 322 U. S. 223
least "fifty-fifty," and some of them say the Kansas channel
always carried the heavier volume of water. [
Footnote 17] They also generally agree that the
Missouri channel began to decrease and the Kansas channel to
increase in volume at some time before 1927. Some place the
beginning of this process as early as 1921 or 1922. [
Footnote 18] The evidence is substantial
that the decrease in the Missouri flow and the increase in the
Kansas flow began before 1927, and it is almost unanimous that,
from 1928 on, the Missouri channel contained no current, or only
the flow of Mill Creek Drainage Ditch, which by that time had been
diverted into the Missouri channel. Witnesses for Missouri
attribute a substantial portion of the filling up of the Missouri
channel to deposits made by the Mill Creek Ditch. [
Footnote 19] They agree, and the evidence
for Kansas hardly contradicts this, [
Footnote 20] that, between 1928 and 1934, the Missouri
channel
Page 322 U. S. 224
almost completely dried up. The great preponderance of the
evidence as a whole is that this occurred gradually over a period
of years, varying according to different witnesses from two or
three to eight or ten years.
On the other hand, Kansas witnesses are not in accord among
themselves as to what occurred in the Bend between 1912 and 1928.
Some of them say there was a divided flow. [
Footnote 21] Others deny this, but qualify their
denials by asserting that, although the main channel of the river
ran over into Missouri close to the Burlington tracks until 1927,
there were chutes on the island, and particularly there was one
chute running from about the mouth of Mill Creek Ditch as it was in
1917 (directly across northerly from the northern end of the bar or
island) due south to the Kansas bluffs at about Station 510.
[
Footnote 22] However, they
maintain generally that this was a small chute, or smaller than the
Missouri channel, at any rate, up to 1922 or 1923. A few say it was
small until 1927, when the alleged ice jam occurred. [
Footnote 23]
Some witnesses for Kansas maintain that there were big ice jams
in 1917 [
Footnote 24] and in
1927. [
Footnote 25]
Different witnesses testify to the two alleged jams. Those who say
one occurred in 1917 assert that it threw the main flow back from
the Missouri channel into the Kansas channel. Likewise, some of
those who say there was a jam in 1927
Page 322 U. S. 225
accredit the same consequence to that jam. The two Kansas
theories of avulsion therefore are entirely inconsistent, though
each is supported by some evidence. If there was avulsion in 1917,
there hardly could have been avulsion, on this record, in 1927. On
the other hand, several Kansas witnesses, familiar with the
territory during one or both of the two years in question, testify
they saw no ice jams in those years. [
Footnote 26] Others say they saw ice, but not in large or
unusually large quantities or with unusual effects on the flow of
the river. [
Footnote 27]
Nearly all of the Missouri witnesses deny that there were ice jams
either in those years or at other times, although some refer to ice
in the river as not uncommon in winter or early spring. The
Missouri witnesses are fairly unanimous in saying that at no time
had ice conditions or others caused a sudden change in the river's
course, [
Footnote 28] and in
this they are supported by a number of Kansas witnesses. [
Footnote 29]
When we turn to complainant's Exhibit 46, we find very
substantial support for Missouri's view that, during the
controverted period, the flow of the river was divided, and that
the Kansas channel equalled or exceeded the Missouri channel in the
flow or volume of water carried. This map, compiled by the Corps of
Engineers of the United States Army, who had charge of the river's
development, shows conditions in 1923. Two channels appear, with a
large sand bar or island between them. The map places the Missouri
channel within less than a half mile of the Burlington tracks. It
shows a width of about 1250 feet at the narrowest point. Soundings,
read from the
Page 322 U. S. 226
south end of the island around the curve to its north end,
disclose that the deepest water ran from point to point as follows:
15 feet, 16 feet, 25 feet, 13 feet, 14 feet. On the westerly side
of the island, the Kansas channel was a little wider at its
narrowest point. Its soundings from south to north at appropriate
intervals were 31 feet, 12 feet, 12 feet and 13 feet. The Missouri
channel meandered from the south to the east and north and then
back around the north end of the island or bar in a due westerly
direction. On the other hand, the Kansas channel was much shorter,
running straight north from the south end of the island along its
western shore to its northern end. The map shows that the higher
portion of the island was covered with willows, and a small part at
the lower end was under cultivation. Furthermore, it is significant
that, at the north end of the island, just opposite the mouth of
Mill Creek Ditch, the water in the Missouri channel was
comparatively shallow.
Exhibit 46 furnishes the most reliable evidence in the record of
conditions in Forbes Bend at a given time. If only this exhibit and
the facts it discloses were considered, clearly it could not be
ruled that the main navigable channel of the river was the Missouri
channel. For purposes of navigation, the Kansas channel was much
the shorter and more direct and, from the soundings as well as the
shorter flow, it apparently carried at least an equal volume of
water.
Exhibit 47, which is described as a revision from airplane
photographs shows in general a somewhat similar though less
detailed picture for 1926. However, two witnesses for Kansas,
Kenneth Robinson and Joseph H. Gray, who hunted in the region from
1920 to 1927 or 1928, testified concerning this exhibit and marked
on it in penciled lines their recollections of the channels,
respective courses in 1922. Their testimony gives perhaps the
strongest support to Kansas' case that the main channel,
Page 322 U. S. 227
during a portion of the disputed period, was on the Missouri
side. But, apart from its inconsistency as to the location and
direction of the Kansas chute, [
Footnote 30] it does not accord with the more reliable
evidence given concerning conditions in the Bend at the same time
by complainant's Exhibit 46, and it is contradicted by numerous
witnesses for Missouri, as well as by some for Kansas, in
allocating a larger flow to the Missouri channel. It cannot,
therefore, be accepted as controlling.
III
The evidence need not be stated in further detail. In our
opinion, it fully supports the master's ultimate findings and
conclusions. It was his view, first, that there was no avulsive
change, whether in 1917, 1927, or at any time. He found there was
some evidence of an ice jam in 1917, and more to substantiate such
a claim for 1927. But he also found, and the evidence, though not
undisputed, fully substantiates his conclusion, that neither of
these jams was sufficient to cause a sudden change in the river's
course.
There is very considerable doubt on the record as a whole
whether the alleged jam in 1917 occurred at all.
Page 322 U. S. 228
In any event, the preponderant evidence is that it amounted to
little, if anything, more than the normal piling of ice on the
heads of bars and islands during the spring breakup. [
Footnote 31] There is evidence that
this occurred each year. The proof, therefore, to sustain avulsion
in 1917 is not sufficient, and this phase of the case may be put
aside.
We agree with the master that the evidence to show a more
unusual piling up of ice at the head of the island in 1927 is
somewhat stronger. [
Footnote
32] But we also agree with him that the evidence as a whole is
clearly preponderating that this did not cause an avulsive change.
As has been stated, there is some evidence that the alleged 1927
jam caused the main channel of the river to shift then, and
suddenly, from the Missouri channel to the Kansas channel as the
latter flowed from 1927 or 1928 until the government's revetment
work on the river forced the channel to its present location after
1935. But this is not enough to sustain Kansas' case.
Both by virtue of her position as complainant and on the facts,
Kansas has the burden of proof in this case.
Cf. Oklahoma v.
Texas, 260 U. S. 606. The
disputed location was in Missouri in 1900. It lies on the Missouri
side now, and has done so, by practically all the evidence, since
at least 1927 or 1928. These facts put upon Kansas the burden of
showing that, in the meantime, the land lay on the Kansas side of
the main channel by virtue of natural changes which were effective
to change the jurisdiction. Kansas has shown beyond doubt that one
branch of the river eroded to a point or points north and east of
this land, probably as early as 1920, possibly earlier. But beyond
this fact, whether on her theory of accretion and avulsion or on
that of island formation, the weight of the evidence is against her
view of what occurred.
Page 322 U. S. 229
Kansas' main difficulty, perhaps, is that, by attempting to
prove one theory of what happened in Forbes Bend, she divides the
weight of her evidence, and thus goes far to disprove her other
theory. To show accretion and avulsion, she was required to prove
that the river's main channel moved gradually from the Kansas
bluffs in 1900 to the farthest erosion point in Missouri in 1927,
and then suddenly shifted back to a new channel cut then through
the middle of the accreted soil, leaving the old one from that time
on a minor or dry one. To show sovereignty by island formation, it
was necessary to prove that the island formed on the Kansas side of
the main channel, in which event a subsequent shift in the main
flow to the other side of the island would not affect her
jurisdiction, [
Footnote 33]
although Missouri's alternative contention seems to be to the
contrary. [
Footnote 34] By
proving the formation of the island, Kansas in effect disproves
that the disputed area became accreted soil attached firmly to the
Kansas bank. Her own evidence in this respect, added to that given
by Missouri, far outweighs the evidence she presented to show
accretion beyond where the present channel lies, and creates an
overwhelming preponderance that the flow was divided from 1912, or,
at any rate, 1917 to 1927 or 1928; that the island formed in this
period, and thus that the soil in question was not at any time
attached firmly to the Kansas bank by accretion. If it was formed
as island soil, it was not accreted soil.
Kansas' evidence concerning the division of flow and formation
of the island, together with that concerning
Page 322 U. S. 230
the drying up of the Missouri channel, also proves not that the
river suddenly cut a new channel through accreted soil in 1927, but
that it merely shifted the volume of flow from one channel to
another preexisting one. In other words, it goes to disprove both
accretion and avulsion. Missouri and Kansas witnesses are agreed
that the main flow was in the Kansas channel from 1927 on. and
there is substantial agreement that, by 1933 or 1935, the Missouri
channel had dried up, except for the flow of Mill Creek Ditch, and
largely had filled up by deposits from that stream and other
forces. Missouri witnesses say this drying up began before 1927,
some as early as 1922 or 1923, and therefore continued for ten or
twelve years. Kansas witnesses generally say it began in 1927, and
continued for from three to seven or eight years. Only a few of
them say the ice jam that year cut a new channel. More testify that
the main flow then shifted from one channel to the other, and some
join the witnesses for Missouri in saying that this shift began
earlier. Except for the few witnesses who testify to the sudden
cutting of a new channel, the great weight of the testimony is that
whatever change occurred in reduction of the flow in the Missouri
channel required several years to complete. It was a gradual
process, and therefore not the sudden shift necessary to show
avulsion. We need not decide what the effect would be if the
evidence had shown this was a gradual cutting of a new channel. It
was, at most, a gradual shifting from one to another. Kansas
clearly has failed to prove that there was a single channel of the
river which gradually moved over to the farthest erosion point,
meanwhile accreting this land to her soil, then suddenly moved
back, either in 1917 or in 1927, to a new channel cut through the
accreted soil. Only by accepting the evidence given by the few
witnesses who supported this theory, which was contradicted both by
the weight of her own evidence concerning island formation
Page 322 U. S. 231
and by substantially all that was offered for Missouri, could a
finding in Kansas' favor be made under the theory of accretion and
avulsion.
Kansas' stronger case upon the proof is on the theory of island
formation. On this, as under that of accretion and avulsion, it was
necessary for her to show that the Missouri channel was the river's
main channel, and thus the island, which is now part of the
disputed land, was formed on her side of the river's thread. On
this crucial issue, Kansas' case is stronger, perhaps, than in any
other respect. She presented substantial evidence to show that,
while the river was divided or during some part of that period,
more especially from 1921 or 1922 to 1927, the Missouri channel was
the main one, both in volume of water carried and, less clearly, in
availability for navigation. There is, however at least an equal
weight of evidence, given both by Missouri witnesses and by some
for Kansas, that the Kansas channel remained the main navigable
channel throughout the period of division.
The evidence on this controlling issue unfortunately is not as
free from conflict or doubt as we might wish. But it cannot be
said, when account is taken of all the evidence, both oral and
documentary, that a preponderance sustains Kansas' view that the
main channel ever changed to the Missouri side. Kansas' burden
required preponderant proof. She has not made it.
As the case has been made, both the master and this Court have
had to rely upon the inadequate and inconclusive documentary
evidence and the conflicting and often vague recollections of
neighborhood witnesses. The sum does not add up to the weight of
proof Kansas was required to establish in order to prevail. The
master saw and heard the witnesses. His conclusions in all respects
were in favor of Missouri. We find no basis in the record for any
conclusion that he performed his task with other than fair,
disinterested, painstaking effort and attitude.
Page 322 U. S. 232
His judgment accords with the conclusions we make from our own
independent examination of the record. It is not necessary for us
to decide more than that Kansas has failed to show that the main
channel of the river shifted at any time in question from a course
such as the river now follows, or one slightly closer to the Kansas
bluffs, to one following the course of the Missouri channel when
the flow was divided.
It follows the land in dispute must be awarded to Missouri, and
the boundary will be fixed as the master has recommended in his
report. A decree will be entered accordingly. [
See post,
p.
322 U. S.
654.]
[
Footnote 1]
Cf. Missouri v. Kansas, 213 U. S.
78;
Missouri v. Nebraska, 196 U. S.
23.
[
Footnote 2]
Act of Admission of Kansas, Jan. 29, 1861, 12 Stat. 126; Kansas
Constitution of 1859, Charters and Constitutions of the United
States, Part I, pp. 629, 630.
[
Footnote 3]
The complaint alleged disputes over the line at points along the
river between War Department Survey Stations 399 and 405 at other
points in Atchison County, Kansas, and at points along the river
between War Department Survey Stations 510 and 515 (Forbes
Bend).
[
Footnote 4]
Attempts at settlement by negotiation had been authorized by
Kansas before this proceeding was begun (Laws of Kansas 1939, c.
355). Apparently they were unavailing, and this suit was
instituted. After it was begun, however, the parties agreed to a
settlement with respect to all areas but this one, and incorporated
it in this record. It will be made part of the decree.
[
Footnote 5]
Jefferis v. Garrison East Omaha Land Co., 134 U.
S. 178;
St. Clair County v.
Lovingston, 23 Wall. 46;
Nebraska v. Iowa,
143 U. S. 359.
[
Footnote 6]
Nebraska v. Iowa, 143 U. S. 359;
Missouri v. Nebraska, 196 U. S. 23;
Oklahoma v. Texas, 260 U. S. 606.
[
Footnote 7]
Since Kansas claims avulsive change both in 1917 and in 1927,
and that the accretion began about 1900 or shortly thereafter, her
claim necessarily implies that the period of accretion extended
either from 1900 to 1917 or from 1900 to 1927.
[
Footnote 8]
At that time, according to this claim, the main channel of the
river flowed through the so-called Missouri channel to the north
and east, but was suddenly changed by the ice jam back from that
channel into a chute on the Kansas side. This chute previously had
cut across the allegedly accreted land a little to the west of
where the present channel now lies. The complaint alleges that the
ice jam occurred "on or about February 1918." The scanty testimony
in the record, if completely accepted, would establish the ice jam
in 1917, rather than in 1918;
cf. note 24 infra.
[
Footnote 9]
The complaint alleges that the ice jam occurred "during the year
1927." The witnesses who testify to the jam at this time date it
variously in 1927, 1928, and 1929;
cf. note 25 infra.
[
Footnote 10]
C. McWilliams (1892); P. Dyer (1898); C. Hudgins (1900); J. H.
Simpson (1904); J. E. Simpson (1905).
[
Footnote 11]
Cf. testimony of L. F. Stalcup.
[
Footnote 12]
Witnesses vary as to the exact time from 1910-11 to 1916 (J. H.
Peret: 1910-12; Mrs. S. Jenkins: 1910-12; R. E. Simpson: 1913; C.
McWilliams: 1912-13; C. Harper: 1915; C. Hudgins: 1915; B. Hudgins:
1916; E. McCoy: 1915). But most of them put this event in 1912 or
later, and the most reliable testimony, by those who moved the
building. (C. Hudgins and B. Hudgins), places it in 1915 or
1916.
[
Footnote 13]
C. McWilliams (1924-25); E. McCoy (1922); A. H. Murray
(1922-23); Ralph Dyer (1923-24); W. Metcalf (1917);
cf. E.
A. Cole (1923, 1928).
[
Footnote 14]
Varying dates are given for the time at which a divided flow was
first noted.
Kansas witnesses: I. Muse: 1900; L. F. Stalcup:
1910-1911; J. E. Simpson: 1912-13, 1917; O. McKay: 1917; R. E.
Simpson: 1918; C. Baskins: 1917; C. W. Ryan: 1917 or 1919; J.
McKay: 1920.
Missouri witnesses: D. Barbour: 1903; B. Hudgins: 1914;
C. Harrison: 1914; Ralph Dyer: 1913-14; C. Harper: 1915; A. H.
Murray: 1915; H. H. Hall: 1916; W. Metcalf: 1916; J. Fitzgerald:
1917; Raymond Dyer: 1917-1918.
[
Footnote 15]
See note 14
supra. A few Kansas witnesses maintain there was only one
channel through this period.
[
Footnote 16]
See note 14
supra. Kansas' witnesses testified variously that there
always had been a channel on the Kansas side, that it was swifter
than the Missouri channel (J. H. Simpson), that the Kansas channel
was the "main river" (Mrs. J. Coufal), that the Kansas channel was
much the larger in 1918 (R. E. Simpson), that most of the water was
on the Kansas side in 1920 (P. Bottiger);
cf. C. B. Caton,
that the river was just about evenly divided in 1917 (C. Baskins).
Missouri witnesses said that there was always a substantial flow in
the Kansas channel, and that it was about as large or larger than
the Missouri channel (
e.g., Ralph Dyer, B. Hudgins, c.
Dinwiddie, J. Fitzgerald, C. Harper, Raymond Dyer). They placed
boats in the Kansas, rather than the Missouri, channel (E. McCoy);
in 1918 (W. L. Moore); 1916 to 1929 (H. H. Hall), and in 1927 (C.
Hudgins).
[
Footnote 17]
See note 16
supra.
[
Footnote 18]
W. Metcalf:1917; W. L. Moore: 1918; C. Dinwiddie: 1920-22; C.
Harrison: 1921; J. Fitzgerald: 1923-1925;
cf. P.
Bottiger:1920.
[
Footnote 19]
J. Fitzgerald, E. Wales, J. H. Peret (Kansas witness);
cf. E. McCoy C. Harper.
[
Footnote 20]
E.g., J. H. Gray: 1928
et seq.; A. F. Hays:
1926
et seq.; J. B. Gray: 1927-30; G. Atkinson: 1929-after
1934; J. H. Peret: 1929-33; C. Coufal: 1929-33; C. W. Ryan:
1928-31; some Kansas witnesses claim the drying up of the Missouri
channel was a sudden concomitant of an ice jam in 1929, but add
that the Missouri channel contained water until 1933 or 1934
(
e.g., C. Coufal, E. A. Cole), or 1935 or 1936, when it
dried up as a result of government diking and revetment work
upstream (
e.g., J. Coufal).
[
Footnote 21]
See note 14
supra.
[
Footnote 22]
E.g., A. F. Hays, C. Coufal, K. Brownlee, K.
Robinson.
[
Footnote 23]
E. A. Cole, J. Coufal. Cole is a Kansas claimant to ownership of
part of the disputed land. Coufal once worked for him.
[
Footnote 24]
C. Baskins: 1917; J. E. Simpson: 1917; P. Dyer: 1917; C.
Dyer.
[
Footnote 25]
E. A. Cole: 1929; C. Coufal: 1929; J. Coufal: 1929; Mrs. J.
Coufal: 1929; E. L. Rockwell: 1927; I. Overstreet: 1927; H. W.
Linville: 1927; P. Dyer: 1927 or 1928. Mrs. Coufal, however,
testified the "main river" was on the Kansas side of the island at
that time. In this respect, her testimony flatly contradicts that
of her husband and Cole.
[
Footnote 26]
D. Baskins, J. Kotsch, R. E. Simpson, J. H. Simpson, W. Prusman,
G. Atkinson.
[
Footnote 27]
I. Muse, L. F. Stalcup;
cf. A. P. Staver.
[
Footnote 28]
C. Hudgins v. Harrison, C. Dinwiddie, R. L. Greene, W. Metcalf,
E. Wales;
cf. E. McCoy, H. H. Hall, D. Barbour.
[
Footnote 29]
Cf. note 20
supra; J. Kotsch, W. Prusman, C. McWilliams.
[
Footnote 30]
They agreed that the Missouri channel flowed around the island
not far from the Burlington tracks, turning south at that point and
flowing against the Kansas bluffs at Station 510. They also agreed
that the Kansas channel was a chute. But they differed concerning
its direction and location. Robinson placed it as running almost
due south across the center of the island in a straight course.
Gray placed the Kansas chute more to the west, and with a curving
course. Both testified that the Missouri channel was the main
channel at that time. The inconsistency between Exhibit 46 and the
testimony and drawings of Robinson and Gray may be accounted for in
part, though not altogether, by the fact they were in the Bend for
hunting and fishing purposes, chiefly in the fall, whereas Exhibit
46 was made from surveys in June and July. The difference in time,
however, is hardly enough to account for the difference either in
width or depth of the Kansas channel as shown by the exhibit and by
their testimony.
[
Footnote 31]
Cf. notes
27-29
supra.
[
Footnote 32]
Cf. note 25
supra.
[
Footnote 33]
Missouri v.
Kentucky, 11 Wall. 395;
Davis v. Anderson-Tully
Co., 252 F. 681;
Commissioners v. United States, 270
F. 110.
[
Footnote 34]
Missouri apparently urges that, even if the land formed as an
island on the Kansas side, the process by which the main channel
shifted from the eastern to the western channel and the former
gradually filled with alluvial deposits, thus connecting the island
to the Missouri shore, entitles it to sovereignty over the disputed
lands.